OK, I was doing some research today, as I have a tank that is almost finished cycling, and I have to go away for a few days. Obviously I'm concerned about my fish dying while I'm gone.
I ran across this article: http://www.aces.edu/dept/fisheries/aquaculture/pdf/462fs.pdf
This is a very interesting write up, and I find it very useful. It basically suggests that the Cl- ion from adding regular salt to your aquarium will protect your fish from Nitrite poisoning. Now, this is not to suggest you should just let the nitrite build up and chuck a bunch of salt in there, but it's particularly useful during the nitrite spiking phase, as the nitrite is said to be dangerous above 0.1-0.3ppm depending on who you talk to. So, if you have a fish producing 10ppm of nitrogen every day, you have a real problem. Right now I'm seeing an accumulation of around 0.5ppm per day of nitrite, so if I add something like 100ppm of salt (way less than typical aquarium salt dosages), my sole occupant should be safe from brown blood disease even if the nitrite builds as high as 5ppm while I am away.
Does anyone take issue with the chemistry/biology here? It does seem a bit too good to be true, but it makes sense - fish farmers can't do waterchanges when a seasonal change disrupts their biofilter. It also puts some sense to the claims of products like "Prime" that say they detoxify nitrite, but they won't tell you how. Answer is they don't do anything to the nitrite, they just have some Cl- ions in solution that get absorbed by the fish's gills instead of the harmful NO2- ion
I ran across this article: http://www.aces.edu/dept/fisheries/aquaculture/pdf/462fs.pdf
This is a very interesting write up, and I find it very useful. It basically suggests that the Cl- ion from adding regular salt to your aquarium will protect your fish from Nitrite poisoning. Now, this is not to suggest you should just let the nitrite build up and chuck a bunch of salt in there, but it's particularly useful during the nitrite spiking phase, as the nitrite is said to be dangerous above 0.1-0.3ppm depending on who you talk to. So, if you have a fish producing 10ppm of nitrogen every day, you have a real problem. Right now I'm seeing an accumulation of around 0.5ppm per day of nitrite, so if I add something like 100ppm of salt (way less than typical aquarium salt dosages), my sole occupant should be safe from brown blood disease even if the nitrite builds as high as 5ppm while I am away.
Does anyone take issue with the chemistry/biology here? It does seem a bit too good to be true, but it makes sense - fish farmers can't do waterchanges when a seasonal change disrupts their biofilter. It also puts some sense to the claims of products like "Prime" that say they detoxify nitrite, but they won't tell you how. Answer is they don't do anything to the nitrite, they just have some Cl- ions in solution that get absorbed by the fish's gills instead of the harmful NO2- ion